[00:03.10]and they’re just not gonna complain. ËùÒÔËûÃÇҲûʲôºÃ±§Ô¹µÄ
[00:04.10]The companies like these kind of workers. ¹«Ë¾Ï²»¶ÕâÖÖ¹¤ÈË
[00:09.10]It doesn’t matter if the chickens get sick. ¼¦Éú²¡ÁËÒ²²»Òª½ô
[00:13.46]All of the chickens will go to the plant ËùÓм¦£¨°üÀ¨²¡¼¦Å¶£©¶¼»áË͵½¹¤³§Àï
[00:15.46]for processing. ×ö¼Ó¹¤´¦Àí ²¡¼¦¼Ó¹¤ºóÒ²ºÍÆäËû¼¦Ö»Ò»Í¬Âô¸øÈ˳Ô
[00:35.06]The companies keep the farmers under their thumb ¹«Ë¾Ö®ËùÒÔÄܹ»¿ØÖÆÕâЩ¼¦Å©
[00:39.58]because of the debt that the farmers have. ÊÇÒòΪËûÃǶ¼Ç·ÁËÕ®
[00:42.90]To build one poultry house ½¨Ò»×ù¼¦ÉáµÄ·ÑÓÃ
[00:44.94]is anywhere from $280,000 to $300,000 per house. ´ó¸ÅÊÇ28Íòµ½30ÍòÃÀÔªÖ®¼ä
[00:48.94]And once you make your initial investment, µ±Äã×öÁ˳õʼͶ×Ê
[00:53.62]the companies constantly come back ¹«Ë¾¾Í»á¶¨ÆÚÒªÇó
[00:55.62]with demands of upgrades ½øÐм¼Êõ¸ÄÔì
[00:56.46]for new equipment, ÌíÖÃÉ豸
[00:58.46]and the grower has no choice. ¼¦Å©Ã»ÓÐÑ¡Ôñ
[01:00.50]They have to do it ËûÃÇÖ»Äܰ´¹«Ë¾ÒªÇó×ö
[01:01.14]or you’re threatened with loss of a contract. ·ñÔò¾Í»á±»Íþв½â³ýÐÒé
[01:08.34]This is how they keep the farmers under control. Õâ¾ÍÊÇËûÃÇ¿ØÖƼ¦Å©µÄÊÖ¶Î
[01:09.86]It’s how they keep them spending money, Õâ¾ÍÊÇËûÃÇвÆÈ¼¦Å©¼Ó´óͶÈëµÄÊÖ¶Î
[01:13.70]going to the bank and borrowing more money. ²»¶ÏÈ¥ÒøÐдû¿î
[01:15.70]The debt just keeps building. Ö±µ½Õ®Ì¨¸ßÖþ
[01:20.06]To have no say in your business, ¶Ô×Ô¼ºµÄÉúÒâûÓз¢ÑÔȨ
[00:00.00]by: ¸ü¶àµçÓ°ÔÉùMP3¾¡ÔÚÈËÈËÌýÁ¦Íø http://www.rrting.com/English/movie_mp3/
[01:23.22]it’s degrading. ÕâºÜÇüÈè
[01:25.26]It’s like being a slave to the company. ¾ÍÏñ³ÉΪÁ˹«Ë¾µÄÅ«Á¥
[01:29.50]Åá¶ÙÊÀ¼Ò¹«Ë¾£¨Perdue£©¾Ü¾ø±¾Æ¬²É·Ã Åá¶ÙÊÀ¼Ò¹«Ë¾£ºÃÀ¹ú¶«º£°¶×î´óµÄ¼ÒÇÝÆóÒµ
[01:36.50]µ±Carole¾Ü¾ø½«¼¦ÉáÉý¼¶³É “¹ÜµÀͨ·çʽµÄÎ޹⼦Éᔺó£¬ËýµÄºÏÔ¼±»ÖÕÖ¹ÁË
[01:48.90]Ò»¸öµäÐ͵ÄÓµÓÐÁ½¸öÑø¼¦³¡µÄ¼¦Å© ÒѾÏòÒøÐнèÁË50ÍòÃÀÔª È´Ò»ÄêÖ»Õõ1Íò8ǧÃÀÔª £¨ÈçºÎÄÜ»¹Çå´û¿î°¡£©
[02:02.46]·á¸»µÄÑ¡Ôñ
[02:14.10]MICHAEL POLLAN£º¡¶ÔÓʳ¶¯Îï×óÓÒΪÄÑ THE OMNIVORE’S DILEMMA¡·Ò»Êé×÷Õß
[02:16.46]Pollan: The idea that you would need to write a book ÐèҪͨ¹ýдһ±¾Êé
[02:19.30]telling people where their food came from À´¸æËßÈËÃÇʳÎïµÄÀ´Ô´
[02:21.30]is just a sign of how far removed we’ve become. Õâ¾Í±êÖ¾×ÅÉú²úÕßÒѾºÍÏû·ÑÕ߸ô¾øÁË
[02:23.14]It seems to me that we’re entitled to know about our food-- ÔÚÎÒ¿´À´,ÎÒÃÇÀíÓ¦ÖªµÀ¸ü¶à¹ØÓÚÎÒÃǵÄʳÎïµÄÊÂÇé
[02:27.98]"Who owns it? How are they making it? "ËÔÚÉú²úʳÎï?ÊÇÔõôÉú²úµÄ?"
[02:31.18]Can I have a look in the kitchen?" "ÎÒ¿ÉÒÔ¿´Ò»Ï³ø·¿Âð?"
[02:34.54]When I wanted to understand the industrial food system, µ±ÎÒ´òËãÁ˽âʳƷ¹¤ÒµµÄʱºò
[02:39.06]what I set about doing was very simple. ÎҵijõÖÔÊǺܼòµ¥µÄ
[02:41.54]I wanted to trace the source of my food. ÎÒÏë¸ú×ÙʳÎïµÄÀ´Ô´
[02:45.22]When you go through the supermarket, µ±ÄãÔÚ³¬¼¶Êг¡Öд©ÐÐ
[02:47.42]what looks like this cornucopia of variety and choice is not. ÑÛǰÕâЩÁÕÀÅÂúÄ¿µÄÑ¡ÔñÆäʵ¶¼²»´æÔÚ
[02:52.10]There is an illusion of diversity. ʳƷµÄ¶àÑùÐÔÖ»ÊǼÙÏó
[02:52.78]There are only a few companies involved ²ÎÓëÉú²úµÄÖ»Óм¸¼Ò¹«Ë¾
[02:55.10]and there’re only a few crops involved. Ò²Ö»Óм¸ÖÖÅ©×÷Îï
[02:59.46]What really surprised me most ×îÈÃÎÒ¾ªÆæµÄÊÇ
[02:59.82]as I followed that food back to its source, ÎÒ×·×ÙʳÎïÀ´Ô´µÄ¹ì¼£
[03:04.66]I kept ending up in the same place, ×ÜÊǰÑÎÒ´øµ½Í¬Ò»¸öµØ·½
[03:07.30]and that was a cornfield in Iowa. °®ºÉ»ªÖݵÄÒ»¿éÓñÃ×µØ
[03:07.82]So much of our industrial food ÓÐÈç´Ë¶àÒÔ¹¤Òµ»¯·½Ê½Éú²úµÄʳÎï
[03:11.86]turns out to be clever rearrangements of corn. ÔÀ´Ö»ÊǸÄÍ·»»ÃæÖ®ºóµÄÓñÃ×¶øÒÑ
[03:22.38]Corn has conquered the world in a lot of ways. ÓñÃ×ÒÔ¶àÖÖ·½Ê½Õ÷·þÁËÊÀ½ç
[03:26.38]It is a remarkable plant. ËüÊÇÒ»ÖÖ²»Í¬Ñ°³£µÄÖ²Îï
[03:27.42]100 years ago, a farmer in America 100Äêǰ,Ò»¸öÃÀ¹úÅ©Ãñ
[03:29.94]could grow maybe 20 bushels of corn on an acre. ¿ÉÒÔÔÚ1͵ØÀïÖÖ20ÆÑʽ¶úµÄÓñÃ×(1ÆÑʽ¶úԼΪ35.24Éý)
[03:33.78]Today, 200 bushels is no problem. ÏÖÔÚ,200ÆÑʽ¶úÒ²²»ÔÚ»°ÏÂ
[03:38.94]That’s an astonishing achievement ÕâÊÇÁ˲»ÆðµÄ³É¾Í
[03:40.14]for which breeders deserve credit, ÀïÃæÓÐÓýÖÖÕߵŦÀÍ
[03:42.14]for which fertilizer makers deserve credit, Óл¯·ÊÉú²úÕߵŦÀÍ
[03:46.14]for which pesticide makers all deserve credit. Ò²ÓÐɱ³æ¼ÁÉú²úÕߵŦÀÍ
[03:54.86]Roush: In the United States today, ÔÚ½ñÌìµÄÃÀ¹ú
[03:56.18]30% of our land base is being planted to corn. 30%µÄ¸ûµØ±»ÓÃÀ´ÖÖÓñÃ×
[04:02.38]That’s largely driven by government policy, Õþ¸®Õþ²ßµÄÍÆ¶¯ÊÇÖ÷ÒªÔÒò
[04:04.70]government policy that, in effect, ÏÖÐеÄÕþ¸®Õþ²ß,ʵ¼ÊÉÏ
[04:06.74]allows us to produce corn below the cost of production. ÈÃÎÒÃÇÄܹ»ÒÔµÍÓÚÖÖÖ²³É±¾µÄ¼Û¸ñÏúÊÛÓñÃ×
[04:08.74]The truth of the matter is we’re paid to overproduce, ÊÂʵÉÏ,ÎÒÃǼ´Ê¹¹ýÁ¿Éú²ú»¹ÊÇÄÜÄõ½²¹Ìù
[04:13.58]and it was caused by ÕâÆäʵÊÇÓÉÓÚ TROY ROUSH£ºÃÀ¹ú¹ÈÎïÖÖֲлḱÖ÷ϯ
[04:15.58]´óÐÍ¿ç¹ú¹«Ë¾µÄÀûÒæËùÖÂ
[04:20.46]The reason our government’s promoting corn ÎÒÃǵÄÕþ¸®ÍƹãÖÖÓñÃ×µÄÔÒò¾ÍÊÇ
[04:22.46]the Cargills, the ADMs, Tyson, Smithfield ¿¨¼ª¶û¹«Ë¾,ADM¹«Ë¾,̩ɹ«Ë¾,Ê·ÃÜ˹·Æ¶ûµÂ¹«Ë¾
[04:23.62]they have an interest in purchasing corn below the cost of production. ÄÜͨ¹ýʹÓÃÁ®¼ÛÓñÃ×ÖÆ×÷ʳƷ¶ø»ñÀû
[04:30.34]They use that interest and that extensive amount of money they have ËûÃÇÓÃÕâЩÀûÒæºÍ±¾ÉíÓµÓеÄÅÓ´ó×ʱ¾
[04:34.82]to lobby Congress to give us the kind of farm bills we now have. ÓÎ˵¹ú»á,·¢ÐÐÎÒÃÇÏÖÔÚËùÖªµÄ"ũҵƱ¾Ý"
[04:37.86]Pollan: A "farm bill," Ëùν"ũҵƱ¾Ý"
[04:40.70]which should really be called a "food bill," Ó¦¸Ã³ÆÎª"ʳÎïÆ±¾Ý"
[04:42.38]codifies the rules of the entire food economy. ΪʳƷ¾¼ÃµÄÔËÐж¨Ï¹æÔò
[04:45.70]Farm policy is always focused on these commodity crops ũҵÕþ²ßµÄÖØµãÒ»Ö±¶¼ÊǾ¼Ã×÷Îï
[04:49.58]because you can store them. ÒòΪËüÃDZãÓÚ´¢´æ
[04:55.10]We encourage farmers to grow as much corn as they can grow, ÎÒÃÇÒ»Ö±¹ÄÀøÅ©Ãñ¾¡ÆäËùÄÜÖÖÖ²ÓñÃ×
[04:57.94]to get big, to consolidate. ·¢Õ¹×³´ó,»¥Ïà¼æ²¢
[04:59.46]We subsidize farmers by the bushel. ÎÒÃǰ´²úÁ¿·¢·Å²¹Ìù